When a young female mouse makes a deal with the devil to become a rock star and learns the price, her boyfriend has to help her avoid damnation.When a young female mouse makes a deal with the devil to become a rock star and learns the price, her boyfriend has to help her avoid damnation.When a young female mouse makes a deal with the devil to become a rock star and learns the price, her boyfriend has to help her avoid damnation.
Chris Wiggins
- B.L. Zebub
- (voice)
- …
Annabel Kershaw
- Jan Mouse
- (voice)
Martin Lavut
- Weez Weezel
- (voice)
- …
Jim Henshaw
- Daniel Mouse
- (voice)
- …
Dianne Lawrence
- Journalist
- (voice)
- …
Valerie Carter
- Jan Mouse
- (singing voice)
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaThis special is the precursor story and inspiration for Nelvana's hidden gem, Rock & Rule (1983).
- Quotes
B.L. Zebub: Sooooo, I gave you a chance, and you beat the Devil? Well, I've learned my lesson. From now on, NO MORE MISTER NICE GUY!
- Alternate versionsThe DVD release on the 2-disc set of "Rock & Rule" is missing two and a half minutes worth of footage. Missing from this version are the following scenes:
- The title segment is trimmed down, and the first few lines of "Look Where the Music Can Take You" have been removed.
- After Jan appears on the cover of "Rolling Moss" there's a scene with her and Wease backstage. Wease tells her that she's headlining the "Roxy Meadow Marathon" as he fumbles with a bottle of champagne -- the cork flies off and pops him in the nose (which explains why he has a bandage on his nose at the Hollywood Bowl).
- When Jan falls out of the log and the Devil morphs into a fish, there's a longer sequence of him chasing her underwater.
- When Jan's hiding in the forest, Wease discovers her before the Devil morphs into a tree.
- After the Devil tells Jan that she has "24 hours to say goodbye to" her friends, Jan returns to town momentarily to seek help from the band, who are loading equipment into a van. They inform her that "the union man says" she didn't pay her dues -- a reveal of Wease implies that he is the "union man" that got them kicked out.
- During the trial, Dan claims that the Devil's contract is invalid "because she was too small," to which the Devil rebuttals, "She was big enough to sign."
- The final credit on the film is missing: "Produced in association with the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation."
- ConnectionsEdited into Nelvanamation (1980)
- SoundtracksLook Where the Music Can Take You
Written by John Sebastian
Performed by John Sebastian and Valerie Carter
Featured review
In exchange for fame as a rock star, Jan Mouse unknowingly signs a contract for her soul with Bealzabub.
Yes, the story's been done to death (another commenter mentioned the very similar "Phantom of the Paradise"), but this has to be one of the most charming versions. Rooted in the '70s, the animation is truly dazzling at times, the music (by The Lovin' Spoonful's John Sebastian) is diverse and infectious and the film itself is entertaining enough for both children and adults. Not too many '70s made-for-TV specials can boast all of that.
While Mrs. Daniel Mouse is the star, it's the Devil who steals the show, constantly morphing and contorting with ease as he subtly growls his dialog. One of the greatest villains to grace any screen, it's almost a shame that Beal didn't appear in a theatrical film where he had exposure to a wider audience.
It seems that "Daniel Mouse" is under-appreciated by fans of the much darker "Rock & Rule," the film that it inspired, but it appears on the 2-disc DVD set of "R&R" (where I first discovered it). Just a warning: the DVD version has been slightly trimmed, but it can be found in it's entirety for viewing online. While this is certainly more sugary and family-oriented than the later film, it's WAY above average fare for TV from that era... I'd certainly liken it to a good Disney production.
Yes, the story's been done to death (another commenter mentioned the very similar "Phantom of the Paradise"), but this has to be one of the most charming versions. Rooted in the '70s, the animation is truly dazzling at times, the music (by The Lovin' Spoonful's John Sebastian) is diverse and infectious and the film itself is entertaining enough for both children and adults. Not too many '70s made-for-TV specials can boast all of that.
While Mrs. Daniel Mouse is the star, it's the Devil who steals the show, constantly morphing and contorting with ease as he subtly growls his dialog. One of the greatest villains to grace any screen, it's almost a shame that Beal didn't appear in a theatrical film where he had exposure to a wider audience.
It seems that "Daniel Mouse" is under-appreciated by fans of the much darker "Rock & Rule," the film that it inspired, but it appears on the 2-disc DVD set of "R&R" (where I first discovered it). Just a warning: the DVD version has been slightly trimmed, but it can be found in it's entirety for viewing online. While this is certainly more sugary and family-oriented than the later film, it's WAY above average fare for TV from that era... I'd certainly liken it to a good Disney production.
- TelevisionJunkie
- Apr 15, 2006
- Permalink
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- Le Diable et la souris
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
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